Brandon Sanderson's novella The Emperor's Soul, published late 2012
by Tachyon, won the 2013 Hugo Award for Best Novella, so I
wanted to take a minute to talk about why I think this one is so cool.

For
those who have read Sanderson's
other works, here's an interesting tidbit: this novella is set in the same
world as the author’s debut novel Elantris,
but on a different continent. If you haven't read Elantris, that won't affect your enjoyment at all; if you have,
watch out for the allusions.

Historically
we've seen a lot of medieval European-inspired fantasy settings in the genre,
but not so many Asian-inspired settings, which is the first thing that
immediately catches the eye on this one.

I
think this novella is a great example of how to use something from the real
world to inspire your fantasy story. In this case, it's the stamps on Chinese pottery
and art. Sanderson talks more about
that aspect, and the process of writing this novella, in this twenty minute
podcast HERE.
(That podcast is absolutely full of SPOILERS,
though, so if that bothers you, read the novella first.)

As
with all Sanderson stories, there
are multiple magic systems at work, and we're given enough to know that the
world is big, complicated, and fleshed out without overwhelming details of
every difference.

The
protagonist, Shai, was awesome.
Clever, competent, active, thoughtful, all the things I want in a protagonist.
I appreciated that this is a story with a female protagonist and yet has
absolutely no romance. Characters Shai
and Gaotona were both a joy to read:
I loved their interactions and how consistent each character was. They're
trying hard to understand each other given how each categorizes and deals with
the world, and the ending felt perfect.

I
agree with the comment on the aforementioned podcast that we could have done
without the extra POVs; I liked one for Gaotona
at the beginning and end for symmetry and to contrast Shai's perspective, but the other came out of nowhere and threw me
off.

Overall,
The Emperor’s Soul is fast-paced,
clever, and fun; definitely worth checking out if you can.